Documents Relating to the Case of Dwight Dexter Exhibit A, Document 1 The Investigation into the Murder of Floyd Babb Notes from Sheriff Dodd: July 20 July 30, 1982, Eaton, Michigan July 20 I approached Morgan Livingston, an informant that we have used in the past, and told him I would pay him $200 to help us find the murder weapon. I told Livingston that we were fairly confident that Dwight Dexter deposited the murder weapon at the Detroit home of his friend Randolph Stone. Livingston assured us he could get the.25 caliber pistol used in the crime. July 23 11 p.m.: Morgan Livingston called to tell me that Dexter agreed to drive Livingston to Detroit to buy a gun from his friend Randolph Stone. July 24 1 a.m.: I followed Morgan Livingston s car to Detroit and watched Dexter enter a house. After Dexter returned to his car, I pulled the car over and searched it (I didn t have time to get a search warrant). I found a.22 caliber pistol in the car, but not the.25 caliber gun used in the murder. I then sent Dexter back to the station with another officer. 3 a.m.: We returned to Randolph Stone s house and spoke with him. I told Stone that if he didn t come up with the murder weapon, I would see to it that he was imprisoned for the rest of his life. Stone finally went next door and returned with a.25 caliber gun. We then took Stone down to the police station in Detroit, where he made this statement: I, Randolph Stone, met Dwight Dexter for the first time on Sunday, July 18, at 8:30 a.m. Dwight Dexter pulled up in a blue Chevy and asked for help. He ended up staying the weekend at my house. During that time, he told me that he killed a white boy in Eaton and that he still had the gun. On Monday, Dwight Dexter returned to Eaton by bus but left the gun and car with me. I ended up selling the gun to a neighbor and abandoning the car in south Detroit. We now have what we need to charge Dwight Dexter in the murder of Floyd Babb. July 30 I have a ballistics expert who will testify that the gun Randolph Stone retrieved on 7/24 was the same gun used in the murder of Floyd Babb. I also advised the prosecutor to begin coaching Randolph Stone and Morgan Livingston for the upcoming trial. How did Morgan Livingston help in the investigation? Did police abide by the Fourth Amendment when they stopped Dexter s car? Why or why not? What did Randolph Stone say that Dwight Dexter had confessed to? What did the ballistics expert say about the gun that Randolph Stone had retrieved? Create a large T-chart in your notebook with the column headings Evidence That Dexter s Rights Were Upheld and Evidence That Dexter s Rights Were Not Upheld. Then add evidence to your T-chart based on the investigation. 274 Chapter 16 Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc.
Exhibit A, Document 2 Police Booking Report of Dwight Dexter ARREST NUMBER RECORD OF ARREST COUNTY STATE 011266 MACON MICHIGAN LAST NAME DEXTER FIRST NAME DWIGHT MIDDLE NAME JAKE RACE/ETHNICITY AFRICAN AMERICAN GENDER MALE AGE 21 DATE OF BIRTH JUNE 7, 1961 PLACE OF BIRTH DETROIT, MI HEIGHT 5'6" WEIGHT 150 EYES BROWN HAIR BROWN SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER 111-22-3333 ADDRESS 1893 WOODSON DR. CITY EATON STATE MI ZIPCODE 48775 OCCUPATION CASHIER AT MCDONALDS SCARS, MARKS, AND TATTOOS NONE TIME OF ARREST 1:45 AM DATE OF ARREST JULY 24, 1982 ARRESTING OFFICER SHERIFF LAMOND DODD PLACE OF ARREST DETROIT, MI DATE OF OFFENCE JULY 18, 1982 BOOKING CHARGE CAPITAL MURDER SUMMARY OF ARREST Dexter was arrested on 7/24/82 and charged with the murder of Floyd Babb, who was shot twice in the head in Eaton, MI. Upon arrest, Dexter was read his Miranda rights and told the reason for his arrest. He was booked in the Eaton jailhouse and stripped of his personal belongings. He made two phone calls. He awaits trial. What additional information did you learn about Dwight Dexter from the police booking report? Did police abide by the Fifth Amendment when they arrested and booked Dexter? Why or why not? Add evidence to your T-chart based on the arrest. Be prepared to answer this question: Were the rights of Dwight Dexter upheld during the investigation and arrest? Why or why not? Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc. The Criminal Justice System 275
Exhibit B, Document 1 Jury Selection in the Trial of Dwight Dexter Original Jury Pool WF WF AAF WM WM AAF WM WM WF WM WF WF WF WF WM WM WM WM WM WM WF WM WM WM WF WM WF WM AAM WM WM WF WF WM WM AAM WM WF WF WF WM: white male WF: white female AAM: African American male AAF: African American female Final Jury WM WF WM WM WF WM WM WM WM WF WM WF Jurors Struck Peremptory by Prosecution AAM WM WF AAM AAF AAF WM WF WF WF Objections raised in 2001 by the defense about the use of peremptory strikes by the prosecution: The prosecution had a history of using peremptory strikes to eliminate African Americans from the jury pool. In 1981 1982, 14 of the 16 juries were all white or contained only one black juror. In 1981 1982, 75 out of 83 black jurors were struck peremptory. Reasons the prosecution gave for striking African Americans from the jury pool: AAF: taught victim in grade school AAF: not strong on death penalty AAM: answered in a defiant way AAM: hesitant to impose death penalty During which stage of the jury selection were all blacks struck from the jury pool? According to the defense, was the striking of blacks from the jury pool uncommon in Eaton in 1982? According to the prosecution, how did it abide by the Sixth Amendment s guarantee of an impartial jury? Add evidence to your T-chart based on the jury selection. 276 Chapter 16 Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc.
Exhibit B, Document 2 The Trial of Dwight Dexter Reporter s Notes Taken During the Trial of Dwight Dexter Macon County District Court: Eaton, Michigan: Sep. 6 Sep. 12, 1982 PRETRIAL 9/6: Defense attorney tells judge that he has not been to the crime scene, or viewed the crime scene photographs, or seen the ballistics report. He also states that he has not viewed the prosecution s witness list. Judge responds that all of these materials have been available to the defense for several weeks. TRIAL 9/7: Prosecution and defense make opening statements. 9/8 9/10: Prosecution calls witnesses: Deborah Sneed testifies that Floyd Babb and Dwight Dexter drove her home on the night of Babb s murder. Sneed identifies Dexter as the last person with Babb on Saturday evening, July 17. Randolph Stone testifies that on the morning of July 18, Dexter arrived at his home in a blue Chevy and asked for a place to stay. Dexter claimed he had killed a white boy and asked Stone to dispose of the murder weapon and car. Stone sold the gun to a neighbor and abandoned the car in south Detroit. On cross-examination, defense asks Stone if the prosecution had ever coached him. Stone replies no. Ballistics expert testifies that bullets from the gun retrieved by Stone matched the bullets in Babb s body. Defense calls no witnesses. 9/11: Prosecution and defense make closing statements. Jury deliberates for 6 hours. Guilty verdict is delivered at 11 p.m. SENTENCING 9/12: Prosecution calls witnesses who claim that Dexter is a threat to society and should be sentenced to death: Damon Trace testifies that Dexter is a violent man who beat him with a pistol the week before the murder. Morgan Livingston testifies that on the day of his arrest, Dexter drove to Detroit to get a gun so he could commit armed robbery and kill anyone in his way. On cross-examination, Livingston is asked if he is a paid informant for the state. Livingston answers no. Defense calls Dexter, Dexter s parents, and two of Dexter s friends. All attest to Dexter s good moral character. Defense attorney admits that he has not prepared any of the witnesses to testify. Jury deliberates for 1 hour. Death sentence is delivered at 6 p.m. Did the defense provide adequate counsel as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment? Why or why not? What evidence did the prosecution suppress during the trial and sentencing phases? Add evidence to your T-chart based on the trial. Be prepared to answer this question: Were the rights of Dwight Dexter upheld during the jury selection and trial? Why or why not? Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc. The Criminal Justice System 277
Exhibit C, Document 1 The Appeals Process in the Case of Dwight Dexter State Court System Federal Court System 3 Michigan State Supreme Court Lansing, MI The court rejected an appeal in 2000. 6 U.S. Supreme Court Washington, DC The Supreme Court accepted the appeal. Verdict: Pending. 2 Michigan State Criminal Court of Appeals Detroit, MI The court rejected an appeal in 1983 but accepted another appeal in 1999. Verdict: Dexter s death sentence is upheld on appeal. 5 U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Detroit, MI The court accepted an appeal in 2001. Verdict: Dexter s death sentence is reinstated. 1 Macon County District Court Eaton, MI Dexter s trial was held in September 1982. Verdict: Dexter is convicted and sentenced to death. 4 U.S. Federal District Court Detroit, MI The court accepted an appeal in 2000. Verdict: Dexter s death sentence is overturned. In how many courts was the Dexter case heard? Which court(s) overturned Dexter s death sentence? Add evidence to your T-chart based on the appeals process. 278 Chapter 16 Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc.
Exhibit C, Document 2 The Supreme Court Agrees to Hear the Case of Dwight Dexter High Court to Hear Dexter Case Washington Press District of Columbia At 11:50 p.m. last night, Dwight Dexter was strapped into the electric chair awaiting execution. At the last minute, the Supreme Court issued him a stay of execution and a last chance to appeal his case. Dexter has been scheduled to die 12 times over the past two decades. Supreme Court justices will review Dexter s case and consider whether his constitutional rights were upheld at each stage of the criminal justice system. Additionally, they will consider whether recent admissions of perjury by two key witnesses necessitate a retrial. One of the witnesses, Randolph Stone, admitted in 1999 that he falsely testified at Dexter s trial. The Supreme Court Building Stone stated that while Dexter had shown up at his house on July 18, 1982, he was on foot and without a weapon; furthermore, Dexter did not confess to any crime. Defense lawyers have since recovered a lengthy transcript of a pretrial rehearsal meeting with Stone, during which Stone was repeatedly coached. The prosecution had suppressed the transcript and allowed Stone to lie about it during the trial. The second key witness, Morgan Livingston, admitted in 1999 that he was a paid informant by the state and had lured Dexter to Detroit in an attempt to frame him. He also testified that he lied during the sentencing phase about Mr. Dexter s intention to commit other crimes. The Supreme Court has heard cases dealing with the rights of the accused before. Lawyers for both sides undoubtedly will refer to the following Court precedents when they argue their case: Brady v. Maryland, Strickland v. Washington, and Batson v. Kentucky. What did Randolph Stone and Morgan Livingston admit in 1999? What evidence did the prosecution suppress in the Dexter trial? How might lawyers from both sides use the following Supreme Court precedents in their oral arguments: Brady v. Maryland, Strickland v. Washington, and Batson v. Kentucky? (These precedents are described in Chapter 16.) Add evidence to your T-chart based on the new evidence and Supreme Court precedents. Be prepared to answer these questions: According to the Supreme Court precedents mentioned above, were the rights of Dwight Dexter upheld in the criminal justice process? Why or why not? Teachers Curriculum Institute 2, Inc. The Criminal Justice System 279